“The plundered a boat full of sardines,” a post accompanying a picture of the besieged boat on Twitter roughly translates to. It goes on to explain fishermen did not resist the aggressive, hungry and desperate horde of men, women and children.

Angry about empty supermarket shelves and soaring prices, some people are breaking into warehouses, ransacking food trucks and invading outlying farms.

“We either loot or we die of hunger,” one of the looters, Maryoli Corniele, told Diario la Verdad, a local newspaper, The Guardian reports.

HORSES STOLEN, SLAUGHTERED

In the first 11 days of January there were 107 lootings or attempted lootings, according to the Venezuelan Observatory for Social Conflict, Reuters reported.

Other headlines in the country’s papers highlight the desperation of the hungry: a mob slaughtered cattle grazing in a field in the mountainous western state of Merida, others looking for food stopped and searched cars and trucks on the national highway..

In early December, thieves stole two horses from a vet school and slaughtered them for their meat. according to El Nacional.

When a truck carrying live chickens crashed on a highway in Aragua last week, looters stripped its cargo, according to Mexican newspaper Excelsior says.

Locals are surrounded by Venezuelan Bolivarian National Guards officers as they line up outside of a supermarket to buy food in Caracas, Venezuela. Protests and looting in western Venezuela over food shortages has left at least seven people dead and many more injured. Picture: AP/Fernando LlanoSource:AP

The unrest was sparked by shortages of pork for traditional holiday meals, despite socialist President Nicolas Maduro’s promise of subsidised meat to alleviate shortages.

The EU sanctions are aimed at raising pressure on President Maduro’s government.

Venezuela “does not have enough resources to import food any longer”, according to Alexander Duarte, an exiled Venezuelan journalist now based in Toronto, wrote in an opinion piece in The Globe and Mail.

The minimum monthly wage is 797,510 bolivars. Last week, that was worth less than $AUD$5.

People confront riot police during a protest against the shortage of food in Caracas on December 28, 2017. Picture: AFP/Frederico ParraSource:AFP

There is very little physical cash in the country, making purchases that require it — like catching a bus — almost impossible.

Basic medical supplies can’t be found in stores. As people die of treatable diseases, the government last week launched a health plan that relies on herbs and natural remedies.

The “100 per cent Natural Health Plan” seeks the “rescue of historic and patrimonial health, knowledge of the old ladies,” President Nicolas Maduro said at the presidential palace.

“I am curing a terrible flu that hit me at the beginning of the year with camomile, aloe, lemon and a little honey.”

Basic medical supplies can’t be found in stores. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro launched a health plan that “seeks the “rescue of historic and patrimonial health, knowledge of the old ladies”. He says he’s “curing a terrible flu that hit me at the beginning of the year with camomile, aloe, lemon and a little honey”. Picture: AFPSource:AFP

The Coalition of Organisations for the Right to Health and Life has denounced an “absolute and prolonged absence” of basic pharmaceuticals to treat diseases including kidney failure, cancer and multiple sclerosis.

Antibiotics and drugs to control blood pressure are also scarce.

More than half a million Venezuelans have taken refuge in Colombia to escape the crippling economic crisis, Bogota’s migration authority says — up 62 per cent on the previous year.

Meanwhile some shopkeepers have taken matters into their own hands.

“We’re arming ourselves with sticks, knives, machetes, and firearms to defend our assets,” William Roa, the president of the local shopkeepers’ association in Garcia de Hevia, told Reuters,

Businessmen fear the lootings, so far concentrated in the poorer and more lawless provinces, will spread to the capital, Caracas, with its teeming hillside slums.

Venezuelan supermarkets that are open have scant stocks and many empty shelves.

Outside, poor Venezuelans wait on the street, begging shoppers to buy them goods.

David Garcia keeps his head just barely above water as he scrapes the bottom of the polluted Guaire River in search of gold and anything of value to sell in Caracas to put food on the table. Picture: AP/Ariana CubillosSource:AP